"For readers of The
Chaperone and The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love, a thrilling,
unforgettable novel about an unusually gifted young man who leaves
Mexico for Hollywood in the late 1920s, determined to pursue his
dreams-no matter the cost.

July 1917, Mexico: Orphaned by a fever
that took his mother's life and a civil war that left his father a
broken man, 11-year-old Diego Leon is sent to the provincial capital to
live with his aristocratic grandparents. There, they try to forge a new
identity for young Diego, rewriting his past and grooming him to take
over the family business. The only relief from this suffocating life are
his warm, kind music teacher and her son, from whom Diego is
inseparable. But when his grandparents force an engagement with a woman
he doesn't love, Diego finally snaps, leaving his fractious country
behind. He heads for Hollywood, where silent films are just
transitioning into "talkies," and Prohibition is in full swing. But
thousands of miles from home, in a land full of people out for
themselves, will Diego ultimately find the love and acceptance he seeks?
In this moving novel about ambition, love and identity, Diego Leon
discovers that living your dreams can come at a cost."

The Five Acts of Diego Leon is a very intriguing novel with an excellent last half after a scattered beginning that almost kept me from reading it. There
are books where throwing the reader into the "deep" and then going back to the "real start of the story" can be confusing sure, but usually there is a good reason for
that since the first few pages are so important.The Five Acts of Diego Leon is just a perfect an example where the use of that technique would make it a stronger novel, since following a chronological order makes for a very
boring and narrative wall hitting beginning 100 pages or so.Luckily my habit of
reading random pages from a book that sounds interesting but whose
beginning is a slog, just to see if there is a "hook", worked so I got
really interested in the story of Diego Leon on about here:

"November 1928His
payment was enough to cover the rent, plus a little extra, so he used
some of his earnings to purchase a pair of plus four trousers, argyle
socks, a new shirt, and a tweed checkered flat cap to wear on his date
with Fiona. That night he showered and dressed and adjusted his tie in
the mirror. He placed the flat cap on his head, turned, and walked out
the door, whistling all the way down the steps."

After that I read the remaining part of the novel in one sitting and then got back
and read the beginning too, though the story really doesn't get
interesting until Diego skips on his arranged marriage and that should
have been the first page of the novel imho...

Anyway, The Five Acts of Diego Leon turned out to be quitea good
story and the narrator who while confused about his identity - he gets his
break in Hollywood by having a (gay) affair with the boss of a studio, though also having earlier encounters with both women and men, and similarly
wanting to fit in LA, he also desired to keep his Mexican identity and
his "regular" name and story while the studio bosses wanted both a
"conqueror name" aka Diego Cortes and a glamorous background to market
him as a star - becomes very interesting after that first blandish half.

The
last 100 or so pages and the series of events leading to a great ending
- which may or may not signal a new beginning, so do not expect
things to be neatly tied up with a string - are superb and the book is worth reading for that part only.

Lots of
topical stuff regarding the Latino and Mexican experience in the US, the
various responses of various people to it, so all in all The Five Acts of Diego Leon is a highly recommended novel with great narrative energy once it settles down.